Wednesday, 6 February 2013

The Francis Report shows the tragic
consequences when patients and carers do not have a voice and are not heard.
Improving systems, management and inspection is part of the answer. But this
does not address the lack of democratic accountability and scrutiny in health
matters.

A Parliament for Health could
strengthen democratic scrutiny and accountability of all provision and
legislation that affects health by creating a representative forum on health
matters within our system of Parliament rather than Whitehall or the NHS. It would
consist of representatives of stakeholders concerned with all aspects of health,
including patient groups, staff, researchers, civil society organisations and
elected representatives from other tiers of government, including parish and local
councillors and MEPs. It could be co-chaired by back bench members of
parliament. In time it could have directly elected ‘Health Representatives’ and
be part of to a new kind of second chamber, to draw a wider range of experience
and expertise into the political process. But MPs could set up a “Health Parliament”
or Forum as an extension of the Select Committee to strengthen their oversight
of health matters. A Parliament for Health could have
statutory rights to discuss all legislation that impacts on their health, conduct
investigations into the implementation of policy and report directly to the
House of Commons through their Member of Parliament (the Co-Chairs).

It would have the following tasks:

Propose national priorities in health, for the NHS as well as public health;

Hold the NHS Commissioning Board, Monitor and other strategic health bodies to account on behalf of Parliament (which should have the final say);

Oversee and hear reports from our representatives on the World Health Organisation, EU Council of Health Ministers, the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and other international bodies influencing health policy;

Promote dialogue round important issues, such as the Francis Report, the Bristol Royal Infirmary inquiry etc;

Recommend priorities for research and development in health policy and provision;

Organise public consultation on proposals by the Government, taking consultation on major health matters from the NHS and Whitehall;

Pre-legislative scrutiny of proposed bills before they are presented to the Commons, to draw attention to health implications

Scrutinise and revise legislation through a “public reading stage” before the second reading in Parliament;

Contribute to consensus building, where appropriate;

Advise and assist on policy implementation;

Monitor implementation of all policies that affect health;

Review and evaluate the impact of legislation.

This is a big and important agenda.
Failures in the NHS are symptoms that this has not been done by Parliament and the lack of proper democratic oversight and
accountability. Simply putting “patients in control” through market mechanisms
will not solve these strategic problems. If greater choice, commissioning and markets
have a role, then the rules and political oversight are even more important. The
House of Commons simply does not have the capacity to address these issues,
even if MPs had the knowledge and experience to do so.

A Parliament for Health (or National Health
Forum) would dramatically increase the knowledge and experience to
inform health policy-making. It could work through a mixture of open public
meetings, online forums and a standing body of stakeholder representatives.
Members could be elected through democratic associations of civil society, neighbourhood forums the
professions and patients, thus strengthening the democratic processes across society. It could
be supported by an all-party Parliamentary Commission and run by a new
department of the House of Commons Service, not Whitehall or the NHS.The following diagram shows the relationship between a National HealthForum, Parliament and the NHS: it is telling that the original, offical diagram had the public and patients at the bottom - the kind of perspective which led to the outcomes at Mid-Staffs and Cardiff University Hospital.

Developing Democracy through Citizens’
Policy Forums

A Parliament for Health could develop
a model for “Citizens’
Policy Forums” to improve democratic government by strengthening public
participation and connecting civil society with the political process in new
ways, using interactive meetings, the internet and imaginative forms of active
participation, round the issues people care about. They would be a form of
practical political education, through which people learn how to contribute
their experience and expertise about health to the policy-making process.

Regular, statutory Citizens’ Policy Forums could
replace ad hoc consultative bodies, strategic partnerships and advisory groups
in Whitehall with a more open, accountable and interactive means of involving
civil society in politics between elections. They would draw a much wider range
of people into the Parliamentary process, contributing to the scrutiny of
legislation and Government from the perspective of broad policy areas, rather
than a party political perspective. Members of Policy Forums would be obvious
candidates for an elected Senate. As a new kind of parliamentary chamber, Forums
would also create new routes into Parliament and widen the pool of potential
members of Government while strengthening the primacy of the Commons.

Instead of being the last western
country to have an elected second chamber, Britain could be the first to create
a new kind of parliamentary process which enables citizens to take a more
active part in politics between elections through the internet, participatory
community meetings and the democratic associations of civil society.

Civil society organisations should
take the initiative and create a Health Policy Forums to scrutinise and challenge
Government, because the cost of not taking into account the breadth of
experience and interests in health is too high.

We need to look at how our democracy deals with health issues in response to the Francis Report into the terrible failures of care at
Mid-StaffordshireHospital. This blog looks are why we need a 'Parliament for Health'; the next blog looks at what it would do and how it would work. The Francis Report, Ann Clwyd’s
shocking description of her husband’s death “like a battery hen” in
Cardiff’s University Hospital and the“hundreds and hundreds” who have writtento herare just the latest horror stories about failures in our health
services. While every day thousands of patients get wonderful care and 90% are
satisfied with their experience, too many people have a bad or even
terminal experience through mal-treatment, neglect or hospital acquired
infections.But our problems in health
are much wider than issues of leadership, management and organisational culture of the NHS. How services are run is just the most visible part of health care, which includes the way we look after our
own health, how we care for each other and the health effects of work as well as the
food, drink and tobacco industries. Each of these present problems which cost many more lives and misery than mis-management at Mid-Staffordshire. The
direct cost of health services are also a critical issue. Direct cost through taxes is about £1,700 per person per year, £106bn, and indirect
cost of ill-health are about £100bn a yearor another £1,600 each. Add to that the soaring cost of personal care, the lack of support for carers and
the value provided by six million unpaid carers (variously valued at£23bnto £119bn, and we have a very complex picture for the state of
health.

Many urgent issues need to be dealt with in our health
services, some of which are strategic and many of which are local, in an area or
institution. But it is decisions on strategic issues which create the framework for the whole system and set the conditions which allow tragedies like
Staffordshire andCardiff’s University Hospital to occur. These
strategic decisions are political, about the priorities, structure and funding
for every aspect of health, including the balance between prevention and cure, between
personal and collective responsibility, or between environmental and medical
factors.

Health is one of many areas
where our political system has failed for decades and Governments have kept
people powerless to do much about it, as the experience of whistle blowers in the health service shows. Our centrally run health service gives
Ministers the illusion of control, so we have had decades of ‘start-stop and
start again’ health reforms which make it very difficult for people themselves to
take part in creating better provision for health.

Since
1974 successive Governments have grappled with the complexity of
preventative health, primary care, hospitals, nursing, social care, mental
health, medical effectiveness, an aging population, rising costs and a myriad issues
that affect our well-being. The NHS has been almost
continuously reorganised in pursuit of better patient care, greater clinical
leadership, devolved responsibility and less bureaucracy. The objectives have
been largely consistent, but successive Governments have taken us on an
expensive rollercoaster, plunging and twisting through GP Fundholding, Care in
the Community, Family Practitioner Committees, Primary Care Groups, Primary
Care Trusts (PCTs) and now Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs). While some interest groups (GPs, consultants, dentists) have done
well out of this mystery tour, many others have not, the public is losing
out, and the cost is enormous.

The
Francis Report will be added to the shelf of recommendations and another transitory Government will give the NHS another shake. Some improvements may occur, if we're lucky, but wider problems will persist and some will get worse because political attention
and resource is elsewhere: when you turn the spotlight on one problem, the rest
are left in the dark. Some things may get better due to lack of
interference, while others get worse through neglect.

Most battles over health reform
are among politicians and the professionals. The public is rarely involved in
difficult debates about how to balance priorities between prevention, primary
care, social care, hospitals or our £9
billion annual drugs bill £8.81bn in 2011,
except when mobilised to fight over a particular hospital, treatment or
reorganisation.

Whatever the rhetoric, the
public only has a token voice in how we look after health as a society and how services are provided. Formal
participation has been channelled through a succession of weak bodies, from
Community Health Councils (1974-2003), Patient Forums (2004-8), LINks (Local
Health Involvement Networks, 2008-2012) and from October 2012 HealthWatch.
There is a tiny amount public participation through representation on health
trusts, and more active involvement through fundraising, self-help groups,
volunteering and charitable provision such as hospices, but these are largely
excluded from decision-making. In many areas the voluntary sector, PCTs or
local councils have set up forums for health and social care, which can comment on
decisions but are powerless.

The 1974 NHS reorganisation also
created joint consultative committees (JCCs) to promote joint planning between
health and local authorities, but they did not have the power to be effective.
Now the Government is setting up local Health and Well-Being Boards which will
face similar challenges with even greater financial pressures than those which
undermined the JCCs in 1974 (see Health and wellbeing boards: system leaders or talking shops?).When the Coalition Government
ran into political difficulty over its health service reforms, it set up the NHS Future Forum, a group of health experts led by GP Professor Steve Field, but barely
two or three of its 55 members represented patients or the public.It listened to more than 11,000 people face
to face at over 300 events as well as engaging with people online, but then
public involvement stopped. Then it is set up the
Nursing and Care
Quality Forumfor another burst of consultation.

But
neither Government nor Parliament have the time or capacity to give health
matters the sustained scrutiny they need, or to develop the political framework
which balances all the different issues and interests involved in health and
well-being. What we need, therefore, is a “Parliament for Health” to grapple
with the political issues in public. A Parliament for Health could have directly
elected representatives (MHPs) or indirectly elected from local Health and
Well-Being Boards and other stakeholder groups, with a majority of from civil
society, to ensure that the people are in charge of the professionals, as it
should be in a democracy.

If
the NHS were a country, its£106bn budgetwould make it the55th largestcountry in the world, about the size of New Zealand, Hungary or Vietnam in
terms of GDP.
It would have a seat at the UN – and it has one in the World Health Organisation, WHO, and its civil
service, the NHS Commissioning Board, Monitor and other bodies, would
be answerable to citizens through Parliament.

If
all health-related policy and legislation had been systematically scrutinised
by “Health Parliament”, with a majority of representatives from patients and
the public, feeding into the democratic processes of Parliament, Governments would not have been able to lurch from one
reorganisation to another. Sustained public dialogue between interest groups
involved in health, including the public, is more likely to have created better
patient care, greater clinical leadership, devolved responsibility, less
bureaucracy and greater emphasis on public health, health promotion and
well-being. Problems like those at Staffordshire, Cardiff’s
University Hospital, Alder Hey, the Bristol Royal Infirmary, Great Ormond Street and elsewhwereare much more likely
to have been raised by “Health MPs”, listened to and dealt with than the regulators who have clearly failed.

We
do not need more inspectors – the most likely response to the Francis Report. David Cameron's proposal for a chief health inspector may be a useful lightning conductor for failings in future, but what will make most difference are the hundreds of thousands of inspectors who go into the NHS every day -
patients, their families and frontline staff. They are also the people who will make most difference to the health of the nation, in homes, workplaces, shops and streets as much as in doctors surgeries and hospital wards. We are the people who determine what happens to our health, and we need more democratic accountability
from bottom to top to make sure that health services and support meet people's needs with care.

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

A national “Forum for Britain in the World” could give
everyone a say in the debate about the future of Europe, so that we the people can say
what kind of Europe we want as the negotiations develop,
not just in a referendum after everything has been decided.

David Cameron’s European dilemma is that we need to
weave a tapestry but some people only want to use scissors.
Weaving is difficult but it takes only a few cuts for the whole thing to unravel. The pattern of Europe will not come in one big picture treaty that can be put before the people like the American constitution, but in the warp and weft of rules for banking, fishing, agriculture, carbon emissions and countless details that make a large integrated market work. Ironically, Europe is creating a constitution in the British style, bit by bit, not a grand constitution that can be voted on as a single text. Another irony is that English has become the lingua franca of Europe, the dominant language of discussion in its corridors of power. At the end of our squabbles over Europe, we could find ourself cut out of yet another contential power that uses English in ways we do not understand 240 years after our ancestors insisted that the British Parliament alone should decide its rules.The fundamental question
is not "in or out of the European Union", but whether Britain keeps a seat at the
table where the rules are decided and how well our negotiators play their hand. Withdrawing simply means we no longer have a
say on our terms of trade with the rest of Europe.

The next critical question is what those rules should
be. New rules are being drawn up right now which will radically change the EU and Britain’s place in it (see this blog on 21 Sept 2012). So the really important
questions are a) what rules do we need to flourish as a country, and b) how good are our people - ministers, officials, MEPs, lobbyists, pressure groups and media - at negotiating
on our behalf. Many voices who speak for Britain are owned abroad or have more interests in global markets than the high street.This makes it essential that European issues are debated thoroughly
so that the British public can tell our politicians precisely what they want from our
relationships with Europe in every area of our lives, not just trade and finance.UKIP and other
Eurosceptics have done a good job in provoking debate, but now we need a proper
forum to have the debate in a way that everyone can take part.

I suggest a national “Forum
for Britain in the World” to scrutinise all proposals relating to our place in the world - the World Trade Organisation, UN agencies, NATO and other agreements which bind us in internationally. It is worth remembering that just a 100 years ago, in 1914, our international obligations pulled Britain into a terrible war in Europe. A Forum for Britain in the World would put the
EU debate in the wider context of trade, aid, security and the environment. A
national Forum would allow all interested parties (stakeholders) to have a say, so that
campaigners for or against any position in Europe (or any other international
agreement) would have to justify their views in the face of evidence and
argument from others directly affected, not just Ministers or officials. It would give people a place to address specific policies, item by item, as they come up, and have some real influence on them. Parliament already has several Select Committees dealing with international issues, nine on Europe alone, but hardly anyone outside Westminster knows what they are up to. They do important work on our behalf, alongside the much larger number of working groups and consultations run by Whitehall. A Forum for Britain in the World could connect these internal discussions with the wider public debate about Europe in a direct, practical way, so that the public can improve
official policy through crowd sourcing, drawing on wider experience of specific
issues and deepening the debate. The obvious question is how could such a Forum join up the debate and weave a worthwhile tapestry of Britain in the World, instead of tangled threads and loose ends?

The Forum for Britain in the World could channel the debate in three ways:

First,an online forum
which sets out what the Government does, current policies and proposals,
including all directives and draft legislation from Brussels and other international agencies, as well as
Government consultations, such as the current review of the balance of competences
between the EU and the UK, or the Synoptic review of the EU Internal Market. A
lot of the infrastructure for this already exists, through the Parliament
Website and gov.uk (e.g. https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/foreign-commonwealth-office:This could be made more interactive through a system for
online comments, rating and even voting on proposals.

Second, a ‘Representatives Panel’ of stakeholders,
including all MEPs, representatives from local government, the devolved
assemblies and umbrella bodies of groups affected by European and international issues, from aid agencies and farmers to the Women's Institute and exporters.
Groups could register to join the panel, stating their mandate, area of competence and
what issues they are interested in. They would get email updates on
policy areas they are intersted in (much as info4localdoes in local government), and opportunities to comment through the online forum. Contributions from the Representatives Panel to the
online forum could be flagged up and notified to other panel members.In addition, members of the panel could nominate and
vote for members of a citizens’ policy forum, on the basis of broad interests
(civil society, employers, workers, researchers, etc)

Third, a Citizens’ Forum for Britain in the World could
hold regular public debates on the top issues raised through the online forum. The participants would be drawn from
the Panel to representative different interests and chaired by Members of Parliament (MPs and Peers), and
report directly to Parliament. Discussions could be held on a regional
basis (e.g. London & SE, SW, North, Midlands, Northern Ireland, Scotland,
Wales), and feed into a national forum once or twice a year.

This process would strengthen the role of Parliament, by giving back-bench MPs a role in chairing the Forum and its working groups, as an extension or addition to Select Committees. It would also strengthen Ministers’ negotiating position in the Council of Ministers and other international negotiations, because it would provide more detailed arguments and evidence as well as broader endorsement as a result of informed public debate.

This could be dismissed as a talking shop, but it would improve
both efficiency and democracy in several ways:

a)streamlining the current process for consultation and
participation on European and internation issues would make it clearer, simpler and probably cheaper;

b)improving policies through crowd-sourcing could save
money as a result of better outcomes: many international decisions have a big impact, and bad decisions can be very costly; c)strengthening Ministers’ position in negotiations on
issues where there is a strong consensus on specific points.

There is a real danger that short-term electoral considerations
and sincerely-held views on Europe could jeopardise Britain’s long-term
interests by over-simplifying the issues. A Forum for Britain in the
World could deepen the debate about any EU treaty negotiations as well as the many smaller changes which often add up to something bigger in Europe's unwritten constituion. If we are to have a referendum on Europe, it should be informed and
endorsed by a broad-based forum in which many different interests have a voice,
following a thorough and informed discussion. Democracy is more than a one-off
vote in elections or a referendum, but a process through which people engage
with the issues before coming to a decision. A Forum for Britain in the World
would strengthen our ability to take part in all international decisions
that affect our lives, which will become much more important as China, India, Brazil and other countries grow stronger. Britian and Europe are just small parts in a global tapestry that is changing rapidly. How we take part in this unfolding scene matters for us and the world.A national Forum for Britain in the World is a particular example of Citizen’s Policy Forums as a way of briding the gap between civil society and politicians and improving democratic governance.

Monday, 7 January 2013

After 1913 the
world changed dramatically. Europe’s rulers went to war, hundreds of millions
were slaughtered, empires were broken up, new global powers rose, women won the
vote in Britain. Bit by bit people created a new economy, news systems of
social security and new forms of global governance that connect almost every
country in a shared framework of rules today. Last century’s traumas of war, economic
depression and oppression were the consequence of fatal political decisions, and
the changing fortunes after 1945 were also the result of political decisions. The dramatic contrast
between North and South Korea, or between Gaza and Tel Aviv, or the City of
London and inner city Lambeth, are the consequences of political decisions. Politics
matters, and democracy means that everyone shares some responsibility for what
happens.

Looking ahead
from January 2013, the coming century may be much worse than the last. Climate
chaos, population growth, water scarcity, food shortages and dramatic shifts in
economic and political power could make our troubles look like squabbles over
biscuits in the Parish Council. Ten or twenty years from now England could be a
rump state, separated from Scotland, excluded from Europe and struggling alone
in a world of high prices and tariff barriers; the USA fragmented under the
burden of debt, its warring States and cities policed by private armies; and the
assertive powers of China, India, Indonesia and Brazil run the new world order
to meet their needs, not ours. Or it could be an era of global peace and
sustainable prosperity, governed equitably under the rule of law and robust,
democratic institutions resolving conflict and managing the earth’s resources
wisely.

What happens
depends on decisions people take now. Citizens, consumers and entrepreneurs can
make as much difference now as the elites of nation states, corporations and international
bureaucracies. The elites are still powerful, but they must also follow the
markets, public opinion and popular pressure as never before. New technologies make
it possible for people to take part and shape events, and democracy has disruptive
power to reshape the world. What happens depends on the ability of our politics
to solve multiple problems simultaneously, in our families and firms, towns and
cities as much as between countries and in our relationships with nature.

Democracy is
a great engine for decision-making. People highlight problems, identify needs,
propose solutions and galvanise action. They challenge, organise and make a
noise about what matters to them. When politics fails, people turn to violence
– the gunshot it Sarajevo, civil war in Syria, riots in the streets. Democracy
is a verb not a noun, and we need to renew democracy to make the decades from
2013 better than after 1913.

Saturday, 3 November 2012

Countries make a choice about how national income is shared between
different groups and the next election will be about which party offers the ‘squeezed
middle’ and bottom 50% most hope that their living standards can improve.

These are the central messages I got from launch of the ResolutionFoundation’s Commission on Living Standards
final report of the launched in Whitehall on 31 October. The Commission included
top people from business, finance, unions, public services and academia, as
well as the founder of netmums, to look at the evidence and find a consensus that
could get support across the political spectrum.

The report, Gaining From Growth,shows how earnings of the bottom fifty
percent hardly rose since 2003, despite a steady rise in national income and labour
productivity. Half the population now get just 12 pence of every £1 earned in
Britain (GDP), and by 2020 their incomes will fall by 15% from the 2008 level,
down to the level in 1993.

Meanwhile people at the very top took an ever increasing
share: incomes of the top 0.1% rose 65% from 2003 to 2007 (p38 fig 2.9), a rate
of 13.4% a year compared with a rise of 1.6% a year for 90% of the population.
At its peak the top 0.1% took 6p of every pound, while the bottom half shared
just 12p.
Low paid workers did not share in the benefits of
increased productivity, as in the US since the mid-1970s, and this
was a direct result of political decisions by successive governments. The impact
on households was reduced by more women going out to work as well as tax credits
and other benefits (Chapter 6), but this also has a cost. Tax
payers now spend £4bn a year on low pay.
The Commission presents a range of recommendations* which,
it argues, would enable low to middle incomes to rise by 7% by 2020, instead of
falling 15%. If it is right, and the recommendations are implemented, it could
make a dramatic difference to people’s lives and British society.
The report is a dense document with detailed arguments and
graphs. Experts will argue about the details and consequences of different measures.
Political activists will argue that the measures
lack ambition or interfere in market forces, depending on their ideology. But most
people will not even know about the report or the debate about the politics of income
distribution. What many people experience is increasing insecurity at work, the
squeeze on incomes and rising prices.

The practical political questions are

What is the big picture story about productivity, incomes, taxes and benefits over the past 30 years?

What is the most credible story about how to improve living standards over the next five to ten years?

And what specific measures will actually bring about improvements?

This report provides evidence, arguments and recommendations, but does not tell the kind of story needed for everyday politics (and to be fair, that is not what it set out to do).Living standards will be a critical issue at the next
election. How commentators and politicians tell the story and interpret what is
happening will influence how people vote more the technical details,
but it matters a lot what the measures are and whether they can deliver. This
is where we need the intense, detailed scrutiny of what is proposed, but our
political system does not have the forums for this kind of detailed discussion
of policy.
But arguments about income inequality are not just technical
questions about how society shares the fruits of rising productivity, but what
kind of society and economy we want to live in.
Two years ago the IMF published a remarkable paper on Inequality, Leverage and Crises. This looks at how financial crises can arise as a result of
changes in the income distribution. The periods 1920-1929 and 1983-2008 both showed
large increases in the income share of the rich and a large rise in debt for the
rest, which eventually led to serious financial crises which shrunk the real economy
and impoverished many. The paper shows that this was a result of a shift in
bargaining powers over incomes, from which the low paid loose out. It argues
that increasing bargaining power of the lower income group is a more effective
way of preventing financial crisis in future.

From a practical political perspective, this
means making the case for increasing the bargaining power of the poorest in society
as a means of creating economic stability for everyone.

It was encouraging, therefore, to hear Phil
Bentley, Managing Director of British Gas, say that it was a great idea to make
firms publish data on low pay “because we need more upward pressure on pay.” Firms should also say what they are investing
in apprenticeships. “The Government, unions and employers need to be better
coordinated” to improve skills and raise wage levels at the bottom. “Sectors
like retail can pay more, because the jobs can’t be exported.” He also said the
EU Agency Workers Directive was a useful tool to stop the downward pressure on
pay.

*The recommendations are to

improve intermediate skills, particularly among the young, and define outcomes for education at 18

make the Low Pay Commission responsible for recommending an “affordable wage” for different sectors,

foster innovation in local areas to reduce reliance on low pay

require companies to report the proportion of their workforce below the Living Wage to encourage bottom-up pressure

Tuesday, 30 October 2012

On Tuesday 16th October Chair: David Hughes, CEO of NIACE, chaired a discussion on learning for local democracy in the Macmillan Room, Portcullis House, Westminster.

The event aimed to share current practice and explore how learning could support local democracy. David Blunkett MP contextualised the debate in the ‘catastrophic’ financial problems facing many local authorities at this time. He called for more community development and community leadership that can redesign public services from the bottom-up. This approach he argued will need active citizens and that can only be provided by adult learning. He mentioned the constructive role played by Ulster People’s College in bringing together divided communities, and Northern College in engaging new communities in Yorkshire as two examples.

Baroness Sharp of Guildford endorsed those comments and spoke particularly about the potential of FE Colleges to take this role forward in their communities. She referred to the recent Independent Commission of Inquiry into Colleges and their Communities which she chaired. The Commission challenged colleges to be a dynamic nucleus and a catalyst for action in their local communities. They should be democratic and involve students in decision-making as well as teaching citizenship.

Chris Minter, the new Head of Policy at the Educational Centres Association and originator of ‘Leicester Speaks’ (www.leicesterspeaks.org) shared the variety of voices involved in one of the biggest local celebrations of local democracy in the UK. He used this to argue that adult learning providers, whether colleges, universities or local authority adult learning services should take a lead on promoting local democracy. He considered that the current arrangements were not working and that historically there are strong links between learning and democracy and that adult learning providers had a strong track record on attracting participation from groups that are often not included.

Cllr Robert Light, Deputy Chairman of the LGA and leader of the Conservative Group in Kirklees, challenged David Blunkett’s view that councils in the North were facing meltdown, but said they had to reconfigure services in the face of financial constraints. He agreed that power needed to be decentralised and local communities trusted to make decisions. The LGA did a lot to promote local democracy through its Be a Councillor campaign, by promoting localism and the repatriation of powers from Whitehall.

Jol Miskin, WEA Regional Education Manager for Yorkshire and Humber, spoke about the long tradition of social purpose education, the Take Part programme and the importance of political literacy. Learning in adult education groups helps people feel more connected, share experiences and find a voice. Learning does not have to be classroom based, but can include visits to the town hall, parliament and other places where decisions are made.

Titus Alexander, convenor of Democracy Matters and Director of Policy at People Can, pressed the importance of campaigning as a public good. He underlined the importance of local government but felt that more could be done to make town halls less remote from the public and that successful local government should be a school for democracy. He also stressed the important role of champions for local democracy and that the skills of campaigning should be much more widely available to the public through adult and community education.

The discussion explored the importance of adult education taking a lead in education for citizenship as well as the tensions in localism.

Following the meeting, NIACE and Democracy Matters agreed to take this agenda forward and keep participants informed.

Friday, 21 September 2012

You should watch The Future of Europe Group carefully. Its nameless Final Report could decide the future of the
planet.

How the EU responds to the world economic crisis could decide
the state of humanity at the end of this century. Disastrous decision’s by political elites a hundred
years ago led directly to the First and Second World Wars, brutal dictatorship and
the slaughter of millions. More enlightened
global leadership after the Second War unleashed decades of growing freedom and prosperity for millions, although much of the Majority World still suffered and
the environment took a battering.

Now another economic crisis is again spawning a new political
settlement. The question is whether the world collapses into chaos before
something better crawls out of the ruins, or whether world leaders can contain the
crisis and create a safe and sustainable order without wrecking everything
first (I’ve read that Shell’s esteemed Scenario Team are more pessimistic, seeing
only two realistic scenarios - "Collapse" or "Collapse and
Recovery".)

A lot depends on who ‘we the people’ permit to be our
leaders (you can’t really say we choose them). And that depends on people’s understanding
of what is at stake.

The eleven Foreign
Ministers who wrote the Future of Europe Report know what is at stake. They
want to strengthen European institutions to manage national economies and
increase Europe’s political clout in world affairs. The President of the EU Commission, Manuel Barroso, wrote
: "We will need to move towards a federation of nation states. ...In
the age of globalisation pooled sovereignty means more power, not less.”

Make no mistake, the EU could set the rules for global
finance, trade, climate, energy, human rights and politics - if it wants to. The EU
is the world’s largest economic block, with over 20% of global income. It has deeper
relationships with most countries of the world than other blocks, through
migration, linguistic diversity, trade and institutional arrangements (and it gives
out more than half of world aid to poorer countries). It also has the biggest block of representatives
in global governance, including two permanent members on the UN Security Council
and a majority in the Bank of International Settlements, all with less than 10%
of world population.

If the EU got its act together it could do great things – or
cause chaos everywhere, as in Greece.

We the people of
Europe need to understand what’s happening and how to use our political skills
to create the kind of future we need to thrive, and not the accidental fallout
from another crash.There are many things wrong with the EU, but it does offer three powerful lessons for managing the global economy:

democracitc rule of law, binding on rulers, states and the rich as well as ordinaty citizens: it is far from perfect, but it has been crafted over decades to resist the arbitrary power of dictatorship;

peaceful mechanisms for problem solving and conflict resolution, at every level from the neighbourhood and workplace to corporate board rooms and country borders: look around the world to see how rare and necessary this is;

core values of solidarity, social protection, sustainable development, freedom and democracy which mean that its richest states give billions to help the poorest.

You may not agree with any of this, but Europe has the political mechanisms for people to openly challenge and influence its rules without fear, unlike most other regions of the world. The political
education we will get is the mighty clash of slogans from politicians squabbling for seats
in the parliaments of Scotland, Westminster, Brussels and every nation and
region of Europe.This could create
enlightenment and elect wise leaders who steer humanity through its
most challenging century. Or it could lead to Britain breaking up, a diminished
England bleating outside a Eurozone grinding citizens in austerity while
Latin America, Africa and Asia seize the reigns of global governance and
prosper (and climate chaos drowns the planet). We are just about smart enough to chose chaos.

But as citizens we can
and should be able to see what’s happening and learn how to influence
events better. Political education provided a partisan press, polarised parties and vested
interests is like health education from drug companies, with no
need to provide counter-indications or truth in advertising. The Future of Europe Group put
great emphasis on “full democratic legitimacy and accountability” as well as “strengthening the European Union as a
community of values,” but this means little if most people are not listening or
feel powerless to take part.

Where
are the opportunities for citizens to join the dialogue and set out their
visions for the future of Europe? As tax payers, we paid for The Future of Europe Group. If they want “full democratic legitimacy and accountability” they should also make it easier for all citizens to join the debate and take part in shaping the future of Europe and the world. Our media and adult education should stand back from the political fray and encourage people to question, discuss and probe more deeply into the politics of our place in the world.